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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

Machine Polishing Paint


meph137
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Hi all, I'm thinking of usnig a machine to polish my car, I've never done this and am looking for advice - is it a good idea? I have some oxidisation on my front and rear bumpers so would like to remove that with G3, and have heard you should use an orbital polisher for that.

 

So, any advice for general polishing, and also how to remove oxidisation, and would everyone think that a machine is better to use than by hand?

 

Also, Is it any quicker? :)

 

Cheers!

 

EDIT - also, seems as though the small battery polishers are called orbital ones, yet the bigger ones (that look like grinders, connected to the mains) don;t seem to be called orbital, whats the difference, any recommendation between the two?

Edited by meph137 (see edit history)
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http://www.detailingworld.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=63859

 

http://www.detailingworld.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=66024

 

And G3 isn't the best option, look for a product that breaks down the more you work it, that way you should get a much nicer finish.

 

Spend some time on the links above and the rest of the DW forum for more info.

 

Failing this someone local to you may be willing to come round with their machine and help out?

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read up on the links that michael has posted , g3 is not the best product if its only slight oxidation, plus take a bit more care on the bumpers even with an orbital youll need to watch for heat build up .

try and find a local detailer lots of contacts on DW if only to get first hand advice

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http://www.detailingworld.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=63859

 

http://www.detailingworld.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=66024

 

And G3 isn't the best option, look for a product that breaks down the more you work it, that way you should get a much nicer finish.

 

Spend some time on the links above and the rest of the DW forum for more info.

 

Failing this someone local to you may be willing to come round with their machine and help out?

 

 

Thanks a lot for those links, Im going to look at them now, as for the wet and dry talk, yeh that much be pretty hard stuff. I know I was spraying, so was using 1200 grit (not opn the finished product!), but I was told to scuff the surrounding area to blend the paint in and it made the surface cloudy instantly, which (imo) seemed pointless as I then couldn't blend, so had to use rubbing compound to remove the cloud.

 

Worked nice in the end tho :)

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Well, been reading since my last post, very vey helpful guides, thankyou. I think I'll try with an orbital, seems safer in a newbie's hands. One thing I noticed was that the guides suggested oxidisation won't be removed on a car with clear coat, does anyone have any info on this? I've been advised it will help. As a side note, I'm quite naive and don't know its oxidisation, all I know is its slightly darker than the rest of my paint! ITs on plastic bumpers.

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Guest damelza

is it just compound paste and a wet rotating buffer? Did our bonnet a treat. We used a bit on the plastic, discoloured headlamps and it made a difference so maybe on the bumper too...... check though. I might be proper wrong!

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Yeh, it could be, which would be an arse. I might try my dads grinder/sander/buffer - you can slow it right down and it has polishing bonnet's, i'd buy my own tho. I don;t wanna spend £100 ish on a decent polisher for it not to work :p

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